Queen Victoria Lytton Strachey (a book to read .txt) đ
- Author: Lytton Strachey
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Another year, Germany was visited, and Albert displayed the beauties of his home. When Victoria crossed the frontier, she was much excitedâ âand she was astonished as well. âTo hear the people speak German,â she noted in her diary, âand to see the German soldiers, etc., seemed to me so singular.â Having recovered from this slight shock, she found the country charming. She was fĂȘted everywhere, crowds of the surrounding royalties swooped down to welcome her, and the prettiest groups of peasant children, dressed in their best clothes, presented her with bunches of flowers. The principality of Coburg, with its romantic scenery and its well-behaved inhabitants, particularly delighted her; and when she woke up one morning to find herself in âdear Rosenau, my Albertâs birthplace,â it was âlike a beautiful dream.â On her return home, she expatiated, in a letter to King Leopold, upon the pleasures of the trip, dwelling especially upon the intensity of her affection for Albertâs native land. âI have a feeling,â she said, âfor our dear little Germany, which I cannot describe. I felt it at Rosenau so much. It is a something which touches me, and which goes to my heart, and makes me inclined to cry. I never felt at any other place that sort of pensive pleasure and peace which I felt there. I fear I almost like it too much.â196
VThe husband was not so happy as the wife. In spite of the great improvement in his situation, in spite of a growing family and the adoration of Victoria, Albert was still a stranger in a strange land, and the serenity of spiritual satisfaction was denied him. It was something, no doubt, to have dominated his immediate environment; but it was not enough; and, besides, in the very completeness of his success, there was a bitterness. Victoria idolised him; but it was understanding that he craved for, not idolatry; and how much did Victoria, filled to the brim though she was with him, understand him? How much does the bucket understand the well? He was lonely. He went to his organ and improvised with learned modulations until the sounds, swelling and subsiding through elaborate cadences, brought some solace to his heart. Then, with the elasticity of youth, he hurried off to play with the babies, or to design a new pigsty, or to read aloud the Church History of Scotland to Victoria, or to pirouette before her on one toe, like a ballet-dancer, with a fixed smile, to show her how she ought to behave when she appeared in public places.197 Thus did he amuse himself; but there was one distraction in which he did not indulge. He never flirtedâ âno, not with the prettiest ladies of the Court. When, during their engagement, the Queen had remarked with pride to Lord Melbourne that the Prince paid no attention to any other woman, the cynic had answered, âNo, that sort of thing is apt to come later;â upon which she had scolded him severely, and then hurried off to Stockmar to repeat what Lord M. had said. But the Baron had reassured her; though in other cases, he had replied, that might happen, he did not think it would in Albertâs. And the Baron was right. Throughout their married life no rival female charms ever had cause to give Victoria one momentâs pang of jealousy.198
What more and more absorbed himâ âbringing with it a curious comfort of its ownâ âwas his work. With the advent of Peel, he began to intervene actively in the affairs of the State. In more ways than oneâ âin the cast of their intelligence, in their moral earnestness, even in the uneasy formalism of their mannersâ âthe two men resembled each other; there was a sympathy between them; and thus Peel was ready enough to listen to the advice of Stockmar, and to urge the Prince forward into public life. A royal commission was about to be formed to enquire whether advantage might not be taken of the rebuilding of the Houses of Parliament to encourage the Fine Arts in
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